Indian minister M.J. Akbar steps down as sexual harassment allegations snowball – World

India’s fledgling #MeToo movement claimed its highest-profile scalp to date on Wednesday as a government minister and veteran editor quit after at least 20 women accused him of sexual harassment.

M.J. Akbar, who became junior foreign minister in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government after a glittering journalistic career, maintained however that the barrage of allegations were false.

“Since I have decided to seek justice in a court of law in my personal capacity, I deem it appropriate to step down from office and challenge false accusations against me,” he said in a statement.

Allegations against Akbar snowballed last week after journalist Priya Ramani accused him of sexual harassment when the pair worked together in the 1990s.

Akbar was “an expert on obscene phone calls, texts, inappropriate compliments and not taking no for an answer,” Ramani had said.

She said that he would often insist on conducting interviews and meetings in hotel rooms.

“As women we feel vindicated by M.J. Akbar’s resignation. I look forward to the day when I will also get justice in court,” she said on Twitter on Wednesday.

Akbar earlier dismissed Ramani’s accusations and said he would sue for defamation. But 20 other women have since offered to testify against him.

Another woman said Akbar cornered and pawed her when she was a junior reporter at the Asian Age newspaper in 1997.

“He ran his hands from my breast to my hips. I tried pushing his hands away, but they were plastered on my waist,” wrote Ghazala Wahab on news website The Wire.

“I ran out of his cabin and into the toilet to cry my eyes out,” added Wahab, who now works as executive editor of Force magazine.

A third accuser said Akbar had greeted her in his underwear after calling her to his hotel room and then forcibly kissed her.

“Suddenly you got up, grabbed me and kissed me hard — your stale tea breath and your bristly moustache are still etched in the recesses of my memory,” journalist Tushita Patel wrote in an article for Scroll on Tuesday.

She said the incident dated back to 1992 when she was a trainee.

Bollywood’s #MeToo moment

India’s belated #MeToo movement has made headlines in recent weeks with women sharing accounts of alleged harassment by several powerful men in the worlds of Bollywood, journalism, comedy and even cricket.

The phenomenon remains confined to India’s urban elite at present, with vast numbers of women elsewhere in the country lacking either access to justice or a platform to name their tormentors.